VizD Challenge Week of 10/1/2007
A 53-year-old woman presents to your ED after tripping down a flight of steps. On exam you note marked swelling of her right orbit with proptosis of the right eye. You ask the patient to look to the side but she cannot move her eye.
(click on image to enlarge)
Questions:
1. What is the procedure being performed?
2. What is the most common reason to perform the procedure?
3. What complication are you trying to prevent in performing this procedure?
Winner receives $5
To submit your answer please click on comments below.
For more information about the contest, click here.
VizD is a weekly contest of an interesting or pathognomonic image from emergency medicine. Its goal is to integrate learning into a fun and relaxed environment. All images are original and are posted with the consent of the patient. For more information please refer to the following link.
6 comments:
1. What is the procedure being performed?
Lateral Orbital Canthotomy
2. What is the most common reason to perform the procedure?
retrobulbar hemorrhage
3. What complication are you trying to prevent in performing this procedure?
blindness
1) Lateral Canthotomy
2) Trauma / Increased Intraocular Pressure
3) Vision Loss / Optic Nerve death
1. lateral canthotomy
2. retrobulbar hemorrhage
3. blindness (vision loss 2ry to increased orbital pressure)
Anika
1. lateral canthotomy
2. retrobulbar hemorrhage
3. blindness (2ry to increased intraorbital pressure)
Anika Baxter Tam
1. lateral canthotomy
2. retrobulbar hemorrhage
3. blindness (2ry to increased intraorbital pressure)
Anika Baxter Tam
abaxtertam@gmail.com
1. lateral orbital canthotomy
2. retrobulbar hemorrhage
3. injury to the globe
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